Vega flight VV01 explained

Vega Flight VV01
Rocket:Vega
Launch:13 February 2012, 10:00:00 UTC
Operator:Arianespace
Pad:Kourou ELV
Outcome:Success
Succession:Vega launches
Next:VV02

Vega flight VV01 (called officially Vega qualification flight VV01) is the maiden flight of the Vega launcher. It occurred from the Centre Spatial Guyanais (CSG) on 13 February 2012 at 10:00:00 UTC.[1]

Payload

The maiden flight was a multi-payload mission that deployed 9 satellites (2 science satellites and 7 educational CubeSats) into space, with a total payload mass of about including the satellites themselves (about 400 kg) and the satellite adapters and dispensers.[2] The 3 CubeSat dispensers were capable of deploying up to 3 CubeSats each or 9 in total, however 7 only of the selected 9 were accepted for flight.

LARES

See main article: LARES (satellite).

The LAser RElativity Satellite (LARES) was the primary payload of the maiden flight, and the first to be separated. It had a circular target orbit with an altitude of and an inclination of 69.5°. It consists in a sphere made of tungsten alloy with a mass of approximately and a diameter of about . Due to its unusually high mass density, the satellite had to be held and deployed by a special separation subsystem (SSEP).[2] [3]

ALMASat-1

See main article: ALMASat-1.

The Alma Mater Satellite-1 (ALMASat-1) was the secondary payload of the flight, with a mass of and a cubic shape with side length of about . As such, both its orbit and adapter were constrained by LARES's. An anomaly during its separation into a targeted elliptical 345 x 1450 km altitude orbit at an inclination of 69.5° was detected a posteriori, and it is suspected that it might be due to the low voltage required by LARES and a thermal imbalance of its separation system (AD-SS). First signals of the spacecraft were received on 14 February 2012, however a few days later, an on-board failure occurred which eventually resulted in a contact loss.[4]

e-st@r

See main article: e-st@r.

The Educational SaTellite @ politecnico di toRino (e-st@r) was one of the 7 educational CubeSats onboard Vega's maiden flight, with approximately the same elliptical target orbit as ALMASat-1. The operations have been affected by unexpected tumbling of the CubeSat, which ceased operations in December 2012.[5]

Goliat

See main article: Goliat.

Goliat was another one of the 7 educational CubeSats onboard Vega's maiden flight, and also had approximately the same elliptical target orbit as ALMASat-1. The satellite could not stabilise its attitude and its communications have been intermittent before contact was lost permanently after the last contact on 18 February 2012. It re-entered the atmosphere on 2 January 2015 and disintegrated.[6]

MaSat-1

See main article: MaSat-1.

The Magyar Satellite-1 MaSat-1 was another one of the 7 educational CubeSats onboard Vega's maiden flight, and also had approximately the same elliptical target orbit as ALMASat-1. It reentered Earth's atmosphere on 9 January 2015, after almost 3 years of operations.[7]

PW-Sat-1

See main article: PW-Sat.

PW-Sat-1 was another one of the 7 educational CubeSats onboard Vega's maiden flight, and also had approximately the same elliptical target orbit as ALMASat-1. It did not deploy its LEONIDAS tail as commanded in April and May 2012 for a planned re-entry in 2013. It turned silent on 23 December 2012 and finally reentered Earth's atmosphere on 28 October 2014.[8]

ROBUSTA

See main article: ROBUSTA.

The Radiation on Bipolar University Satellite Test Application (ROBUSTA) comprised another one of the 7 educational CubeSats onboard Vega's maiden flight that also had a target orbit similar to ALMASat-1's. The satellite emitted a weak signal at the beginning of the mission, but no further communication has been received since. Investigations identified a fabrication defect which prevents the CubeSat's batteries from being charged.[9]

UniCubeSat-GG

See main article: UniCubeSat-GG.

UniCubeSat-GG was another one of the 7 educational CubeSats onboard Vega's maiden flight, and also had approximately the same elliptical target orbit as ALMASat-1. It emitted data for only 1 to 2 weeks after launch.[10]

Xatcobeo

See main article: Xatcobeo.

Xatcobeo was another one of the 7 educational CubeSats onboard Vega's maiden flight, and also had approximately the same elliptical target orbit as ALMASat-1. It also experienced unexpected tumbling.[11]

Mission description

Launch date

The successful Vega qualification flight took place on 13 February 2012 at 10:00:00 UTC from the ELV launch pad in Kourou, French Guiana.[12] [13] It was the first Arianespace launch of 2012, followed by 7 Ariane 5 and 2 Soyuz flights.

Orbit

The mission was planned to last 1 hour and 21 minutes, placing the primary payload into its circular orbit at an altitude of about and an inclination of about 69.5° and the secondary payloads into corresponding elliptical orbits with a perigee of about 345 km.[1]

Notes and References

  1. Vega qualification flight VV01. ESA Media Relations Office. European Space Agency. 6 February 2012. 23 August 2018.
  2. VV01 to VV04 Missions. Italian Space Agency. 1 April 2015 . 26 August 2018.
  3. Web site: LARES. directory.eoportal.org. European Space Agency. 26 August 2018.
  4. Web site: ALMASat-1. directory.eoPortal.org. European Space Agency. 26 August 2018.
  5. Web site: E-ST@R . directory.eoPortal.org. European Space Agency. 26 August 2018.
  6. Web site: GOLIAT. directory.eoPortal.org. European Space Agency. 26 August 2018.
  7. Web site: MaSat-1. directory.eoPortal.org. European Space Agency. 26 August 2018.
  8. Web site: PW-Sat . directory.eoPortal.org. European Space Agency. 26 August 2018.
  9. Web site: ROBUSTA. directory.eoPortal.org . European Space Agency. 26 August 2018.
  10. Web site: UniCubeSat-GG. directory.eoPortal.org . European Space Agency. 26 August 2018.
  11. Web site: Xatcobeo. directory.eoPortal.org. European Space Agency. 26 August 2018.
  12. Bravo Europe!!! Success of the first Vega launch: Historic success for space Europe. Arianespace. 13 February 2012. 26 August 2018.
  13. Web site: Bravo l'Europe !!! Succès du premier lancement de Vega. Réussite historique de l'Europe spatiale. Arianespace. 13 February 2012. 26 August 2018 . fr.